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Dive into the research topics where Marcus G. Burke is active.

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Featured researches published by Marcus G. Burke.


Review of Scientific Instruments | 2012

Multi-point, high-speed passive ion velocity distribution diagnostic on the Pegasus Toroidal Experiment.

Marcus G. Burke; R. J. Fonck; Michael W. Bongard; David J. Schlossberg; G. Winz

A passive ion temperature polychromator has been deployed on Pegasus to study power balance and non-thermal ion distributions that arise during point source helicity injection. Spectra are recorded from a 1 m F/8.6 Czerny-Turner polychromator whose output is recorded by an intensified high-speed camera. The use of high orders allows for a dispersion of 0.02 Å/mm in 4th order and a bandpass of 0.14 Å (~13 km/s) at 3131 Å in 4th order with 100 μm entrance slit. The instrument temperature of the spectrometer is 15 eV. Light from the output of an image intensifier in the spectrometer focal plane is coupled to a high-speed CMOS camera. The system can accommodate up to 20 spatial points recorded at 0.5 ms time resolution. During helicity injection, stochastic magnetic fields keep T(e) low (100 eV) and thus low ionization impurities penetrate to the core. Under these conditions, high core ion temperatures are measured (T(i) ≈ 1.2 keV, T(e) ≈ 0.1 keV) using spectral lines from carbon III, nitrogen III, and boron IV.


Physical Review Letters | 2016

High Confinement Mode and Edge Localized Mode Characteristics in a Near-Unity Aspect Ratio Tokamak

Kathreen E. Thome; Michael W. Bongard; Jayson L. Barr; Grant M. Bodner; Marcus G. Burke; R. J. Fonck; D.M. Kriete; J.M. Perry; David J. Schlossberg

Tokamak experiments at near-unity aspect ratio A≲1.2 offer new insights into the self-organized H-mode plasma confinement regime. In contrast to conventional A∼3 plasmas, the L-H power threshold P_{LH} is ∼15× higher than scaling predictions, and it is insensitive to magnetic topology, consistent with modeling. Edge localized mode (ELM) instabilities shift to lower toroidal mode numbers as A decreases. These ultralow-A operations enable heretofore inaccessible J_{edge}(R,t) measurements through an ELM that show a complex multimodal collapse and the ejection of a current-carrying filament.


Nuclear Fusion | 2014

Characterization of peeling modes in a low aspect ratio tokamak

Michael W. Bongard; Kathreen E. Thome; Jayson L. Barr; Marcus G. Burke; R. J. Fonck; E. T. Hinson; A. J. Redd; David J. Schlossberg

Peeling modes are observed at the plasma edge in the Pegasus Toroidal Experiment under conditions of high edge current density (Jedge ~ 0.1 MA m−2) and low magnetic field (B ~ 0.1 T) present at near-unity aspect ratio. Their macroscopic properties are measured using external Mirnov coil arrays, Langmuir probes and high-speed visible imaging. The modest edge parameters and short pulse lengths of Pegasus discharges permit direct measurement of the internal magnetic field structure with an insertable array of Hall-effect sensors, providing the current profile and its temporal evolution. Peeling modes generate coherent, edge-localized electromagnetic activity with low toroidal mode numbers n ≤ 3 and high poloidal mode numbers, in agreement with theoretical expectations of a low-n external kink structure. Coherent MHD fluctuation amplitudes are found to be strongly dependent on the experimentally measured Jedge/B peeling instability drive, consistent with theory. Peeling modes nonlinearly generate ELM-like, field-aligned filamentary structures that detach from the edge and propagate radially outward. The KFIT equilibrium code is extended with an Akima spline profile parameterization and an improved model for induced toroidal wall current estimation to obtain a reconstruction during peeling activity with its current profile constrained by internal Hall measurements. It is used to test the analytic peeling stability criterion and numerically evaluate ideal MHD stability. Both approaches predict instability, in agreement with experiment, with the latter identifying an unstable external kink.


Nuclear Fusion | 2017

H-mode plasmas at very low aspect ratio on the Pegasus Toroidal Experiment

Kathleen E. Thome; Michael W. Bongard; Jayson L. Barr; Grant M. Bodner; Marcus G. Burke; Raymonf J. Fonck; D.M. Kriete; J.M. Perry; Joshua A. Reusch; David J. Schlossberg

H-mode is obtained at


Physics of Plasmas | 2018

Non-inductively driven tokamak plasmas at near-unity βt in the Pegasus toroidal experiment

J.A. Reusch; Grant M. Bodner; Michael W. Bongard; Marcus G. Burke; R. J. Fonck; J.L. Pachicano; J.M. Perry; C. Pierren; A. T. Rhodes; N.J. Richner; C. Rodriguez Sanchez; D. J. Schlossberg; J.D. Weberski


Physical Review Letters | 2017

Noninductively Driven Tokamak Plasmas at Near-Unity Toroidal Beta

David J. Schlossberg; Grant M. Bodner; Michael W. Bongard; Marcus G. Burke; R. J. Fonck; J.M. Perry; Joshua A. Reusch

A\sim 1.2


Physics of Plasmas | 2016

Impedance of an intense plasma-cathode electron source for tokamak startup

E. T. Hinson; Jayson L. Barr; Michael W. Bongard; Marcus G. Burke; R. J. Fonck; J.M. Perry


Review of Scientific Instruments | 2018

Spatial heterodyne spectroscopy for high speed measurements of Stark split neutral beam emission in a high temperature plasma

Marcus G. Burke; R. J. Fonck; G.R. McKee; G. Winz

in the Pegasus Toroidal Experiment via Ohmic heating, high-field-side fueling, and low edge recycling in both limited and diverted magnetic topologies. These H-mode plasmas show the formation of edge current and pressure pedestals and a doubling of the energy confinement time to


Nuclear Fusion | 2017

Continuous, edge localized ion heating during non-solenoidal plasma startup and sustainment in a low aspect ratio tokamak

Marcus G. Burke; Jayson L. Barr; Michael W. Bongard; R. J. Fonck; E. T. Hinson; J.M. Perry; Joshua A. Reusch; David J. Schlossberg


Archive | 2016

Public Data Set: H-mode Plasmas at Very Low Aspect Ratio on the Pegasus Toroidal Experiment

Kathreen E. Thome; Michael W. Bongard; Jayson L. Barr; Grant M. Bodner; Marcus G. Burke; R. J. Fonck; D.M. Kriete; J.M. Perry; Joshua A. Reusch; David J. Schlossberg

{ {H}_{98y,2}}\sim 1

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R. J. Fonck

University of Wisconsin-Madison

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Michael W. Bongard

University of Wisconsin-Madison

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J.M. Perry

University of Wisconsin-Madison

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David J. Schlossberg

University of Wisconsin-Madison

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Grant M. Bodner

University of Wisconsin-Madison

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Jayson L. Barr

University of Wisconsin-Madison

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J.A. Reusch

University of Wisconsin-Madison

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Joshua A. Reusch

University of Wisconsin-Madison

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E. T. Hinson

University of Wisconsin-Madison

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N.J. Richner

University of Wisconsin-Madison

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